
-
Jaiswal's hundred leaves England needing Oval-record chase to beat India
-
At open-air Church party, many thousands of young Catholics eagerly await pope
-
Schmidt hails 'grit and resilience' as his Wallabies upset Lions
-
Dmitry Medvedev: Russia's hawkish ex-president
-
Imperious Ledecky beats McIntosh to win 800m free thriller
-
Ledecky reigns over McIntosh as record-breaking US hit back at critics
-
Farrell says 'dream' Lions should be proud despite bitter defeat
-
Ledecky beats McIntosh to win 800m freestyle thriller
-
Fearless Wallabies stun weary Lions to win third Test 22-12
-
Double champion Walsh calls Phelps criticism 'frustrating'
-
Jaiswal and Deep keep India in the hunt against England
-
Piastri edges Norris as McLaren dominate Hungarian GP final practice
-
US envoy meets Israeli hostage families in Tel Aviv
-
McKeown beats Smith again for world backstroke double
-
New dad McEvoy adds 'unreal' world swimming gold to Olympic title
-
Walsh completes world butterfly double in riposte to Phelps
-
Turkey starts supplying Azerbaijani gas to boost Syria's power output
-
Thousands of young Catholics converge for grand Pope Leo vigil
-
SpaceX Crew Dragon docks with International Space Station
-
New push to reach plastic pollution pact
-
US do talking in pool after Phelps, Lochte slam worlds performance
-
Up to a million young Catholics expected for grand Pope Leo vigil
-
New push to reach plastic polution pact
-
Second seed Fritz ends Canadian hopes at ATP Toronto Masters
-
Japan sweats through hottest July on record
-
Jefferson-Wooden, Bednarek blaze to 100m titles at US trials
-
Son Heung-min to leave Tottenham this summer after decade
-
Richardson 'domestic violence' drama overshadows US trials
-
Bid to relocate US Space Shuttle Discovery faces museum pushback
-
Academics warn Columbia University deal sets dangerous precedent
-
Sevastova topples Pegula to book date with Osaka, Swiatek advances in Montreal
-
Former Olympic champion Mu-Nikolayev fails in worlds bid
-
Sensible and steely: how Mexico's Sheinbaum has dealt with Trump
-
Young leads at weather-hit PGA Wyndham Championship
-
US sprint star Richardson out of trials following arrest
-
Rublev, Tiafoe sweat out three-set wins in Toronto
-
Ex-porn actor to be Colombian equality minister
-
Olympic swim greats Phelps, Lochte, rip US World Championships performance
-
Brazilians burn Trump effigies as tariffs spark anger
-
Global stocks fall sharply on weak US job data, Trump tariffs
-
Lyles, Richardson scratch from 100m at US trials
-
NFL Commanders win key vote in quest for new stadium
-
US Fed governor to resign early at critical time for central bank
-
US keeper Turner joins Lyon from Notts Forest, loaned to MLS
-
Epstein accomplice Maxwell moved to minimum security Texas prison
-
Sevastova shocks fourth-ranked Pegula to book date with Osaka
-
End of the chain gang? NFL adopts virtual measurement system
-
Deep lucky to escape Duckett 'elbow' as India get under England's skin
-
Search intensifies for five trapped in giant Chile copper mine
-
Trump orders firing of US official as cracks emerge in jobs market
RBGPF | 0% | 74.94 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.09% | 22.87 | $ | |
VOD | 1.37% | 10.96 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
NGG | 1.99% | 71.82 | $ | |
RELX | -0.58% | 51.59 | $ | |
BTI | 1.23% | 54.35 | $ | |
AZN | 1.16% | 73.95 | $ | |
GSK | 1.09% | 37.56 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.07% | 14.19 | $ | |
RIO | -0.2% | 59.65 | $ | |
SCS | -1.47% | 10.18 | $ | |
JRI | -0.23% | 13.1 | $ | |
BP | -1.26% | 31.75 | $ | |
BCC | -0.55% | 83.35 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.34% | 23.35 | $ | |
BCE | 1.02% | 23.57 | $ |

Graveyard sheds light on Kim Jong Un's South Korean heritage
North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un has threatened Seoul with fiery destruction, but as a remote graveyard on a resort island shows, he has closer links to the South than he might like to admit.
At a cemetery in a hard-to-find corner of South Korea's Jeju island, there are 13 tombstones bearing the Ko family name -- Kim's relatives through his mother, Ko Yong Hui.
Jong Un is the third member of the Kim family to rule North Korea, following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather -- what official hagiography calls the "Paektu bloodline".
But the Jeju graves tell a wider story.
Kim's mother was born in Osaka in 1952 to a native Jeju islander who emigrated to Japan in 1929, when the Korean peninsula was under Tokyo's colonial rule.
Many of her family, including Kim's maternal great-grandfather, are buried on Jeju, their overgrown graves a stark contrast to Pyongyang's Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, where the embalmed bodies of Kim's father and grandfather Kim Il Sung lie in state.
After Kim came to power in 2011 following the death of his father Kim Jong Il, many experts highlighted his mother's South Korean and Japanese heritage. Pyongyang has never confirmed it.
The regime "must have feared confirmation would undermine its legitimacy", Cheong Seong-chang of the Center for North Korea Studies at the Sejong Institute, told AFP.
The Kim dynasty bases its claim to power on Kim Il Sung's role as a guerrilla fighter driving out Japan and winning Korea its independence in 1945.
"Korea-Japan heritage runs directly counter to the North Korean myth of its leadership," Cheong said.
- Kim's mother -
Kim's mother grew up in the Japanese port city of Osaka, but her family moved to North Korea in the 1960s as part of a decades-long repatriation programme by Pyongyang.
The scheme urged ethnic Koreans living in Japan to move to North Korea, part of a drive to "claim supremacy" over the South, said Park Chul-hyun, a novelist and columnist in Tokyo.
"The North saw the Korean-Japanese community as a strategic battleground," he said, and managed to convince nearly 100,000 ethnic Koreans to relocate to the "socialist paradise".
The Ko family answered the call, and lived a relatively normal life in the North until their eldest daughter caught the eye of the country's heir apparent.
Experts believe that Ko, who was a performer with the Mansudae Art Troupe of musicians and dancers, first met Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang in 1972.
She would become his partner in 1975, experts say, and although there is no official record of their marriage the pair had three children. She died in 2004.
"There has been nothing about Ko Yong Hui in official state media," said Rachel Minyoung Lee, a non-resident fellow with the 38 North Program at the Washington-based Stimson Center.
There is not much in state media about Kim Jong Un's background and heritage generally beyond attempts to show he is the legitimate heir to the Mount Paektu legacy, she added.
– Empty grave -
South Korean media discovered the Ko family graves on Jeju in 2014 -- one of the first real confirmations of Kim Jong Un's South Korean ancestry.
At that time, there was a plaque -- known as an "empty grave" in the South -- honouring Kim's maternal grandfather Ko Gyong Taek, even though he died and was buried in the North.
"Born in 1913 and moved to Japan in 1929. He passed away in 1999," read the plaque, a custom which allows family members to perform ancestor rites even if the body is not present.
The plaque was not there when AFP visited the Jeju graveyard in April 2022.
It had been removed by a distant relative of Kim Jong Un, who was shocked by the media attention and feared the grave would be vandalised, the daily Chosun Ilbo reported.
He said his family "knew nothing about the relation to Kim Jong Un", prior to the media discovery, the report said.
Z.Ramadan--SF-PST